Author Archives: twebb1

Fall 2016 Dance Concert (12/2 + 12/3)

The Department of Music and Dance sends a warm invitation to all! This Fall concert will feature fall-dance-concert-posterdances and music from a variety of styles and from various cultural traditions including Ballet, Taiko, Modern, Tap and more!

Come celebrate our students and faculty with this joyous end of the semester showcase. Free and open to the public. All ages are welcome.

LPAC Pearson-Hall Theater

Friday 12/2 4:30PM
Saturday 12/3 8PM

There is a “Talk Back” Q & A panel immediately following the Saturday show. Please join Professor K. Elizabeth Stevens from the Department of Theater for a moderated discussion about dance.

Fall 2016 Dance Concert (12/2 + 12/3)

The Department of Music and Dance sends a warm invitation to all! This Fall concert will feature fall-dance-concert-posterdances and music from a variety of styles and from various cultural traditions including Ballet, Taiko, Modern, Tap and more!

Come celebrate our students and faculty with this joyous end of the semester showcase. Free and open to the public. All ages are welcome.

LPAC Pearson-Hall Theater

Friday 12/2 4:30PM
Saturday 12/3 8PM

There is a “Talk Back” Q & A panel immediately following the Saturday show. Please join Professor K. Elizabeth Stevens from the Department of Theater for a moderated discussion about dance.

Senior Company 2017 presents THE TOTALITARIANS (12/2-4)

A comic look at hypocrisy and a culture of politictotalitariansposterfinalforwebal infighting, and how we might be on the brink of revolution in Nebraska. Peter Sinn Nachtrieb’s play follows Penny, a former roller derby star and compulsively watchable candidate for state office, who enlists the help of silver tongued operative Francine to manage her political ambitions. Penny’s nefarious plans for the Cornhusker State are revealed via Francine’s doctor husband, Jeffrey, who it turns out, is lying to his dying patients.

The Totalitarians is a raucous dark comedy about the state of modern political discourse, modern relationships, and how easy it is to believe truths without facts.

LPAC Frear Ensemble Theater
Dec 2 @ 8PM
Dec 3 @ 2PM and 8PM
Dec 4 @ 2PM

For more updated info, find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/180420805752981/

THE TOTALITARIANS is presented by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service, Inc., New York.

Giant Eyeballs and Media Design

If you walked through the Science Center Quad between 7:00 and 9:00pm over Halloween weekend, you may have felt a conspicuous presence. And if you looked skyward, you probably noticed that you were being observed from the water tower – or more accurately by the water tower, which had been transformed into a giant, animated eyeball by members of the Theater Department, LPAC Production Office, and ITS.

That idea, later entitled “Who’s Watching” by Scott Burgess, came about during a conversation between us  at the 2016 Media Architecture Summit (MAS). At MAS, we learned about digital placemaking through large-scale light installations and video projection. The lectures presented by the artists discussed engagement in public spaces, spectacle, ephemeral architecture, and the cross disciplinary aspects of media art. While our eyeball was merely an animation, spliced together with some video of dancing skeletons, ghosts, and a jack-o-lantern, many of the speakers at MAS presented on interactive artworks – pieces that people could influence through their own behavior, or control directly via mobile devices.

Among the works presented was Yong Ju Lee’s “Filament Mind,” a permanent installation in Wyoming’s Teton County Library. It utilizes a data stream from the library’s catalogue system, and a series of over forty projectors attached to a column in the building’s atrium. Aimed upward, with bundles of transparent fiber optic cable attached to their lenses, the array projects brilliant hues of electric blue, yellow and purple. The fiber optic bundles contain this light, twisting around the column as they climb to the ceiling, and then arcing outward to the walls, where each individual cable terminates on a different set of three dimensional words. As library-goers search the catalogue, their queries are illuminated in real time, thus visualizing the thoughts of the library as a whole, and its individual visitors, through fiber optic neurons.

Another talk addressed the issues of mass surveillance and big data. David Rokeby discussed “Taken,” a touring installation created in 2002 which simultaneously shoots and projects live video of people as they walk through a gallery, periodically zooming in on an individual, snapping a freeze frame, and arbitrarily applying an adjective to that person’s image. Visitors might be labeled “complicit,” “unsuspecting” or “hungry,” as the work asks them to consider the question “how does it feel to be judged by a computer?” and the idea that “when an algorithm is attached to a sensor, that algorithm projects behavior back into the space.”

Our own “Who’s Watching” did not seek to provide insight into important issues of the day, nor prompt any profound questions (though I’m sure we’d all like to know just how long the creature with giant blue eye stalks has been living under our parking lot). We simply set out to have a bit of Halloween fun on one of the larger unornamented surfaces on campus. In the process we experimented with projections of climate visualization, images created through electron microscopy and the Hubble telescope, and some interesting deep sea animals. If you have ideas for the future, if you’d like to experience an interactive work, if you want to add media design to your terms of study, or if you want to learn how we created the eyeball, we invite you to get in touch. Send us an email at the addresses below, drop by LPAC, or stop in at the Language and Media Centers. We’d be happy to hear from you. And stay tuned for more pop-up digital events around campus.

Jeremy Polk <jpolk1@swarthmore.edu>
Tara Webb <twebb1@swarthmore.edu>
Scott Burgess <jburges1@swarthmore.edu>

Olivia Sabee presents choreography in Wallingford (10/28 @ 7PM)

postcardagoraThe fall Friday Night Live concert series at Community Arts Center, 414 Plush Mill Road, Wallingford, PA, continues with an evening of Brazilian jazz and more with Minas and visual art by Nicole Tymowczak, Anthe Capitan-Valais and a special dance performance by Agora Dance on October 28th at 7:00 p.m. 
 
Agora Dance presents 3 Minutes Max, a selection of bite-sized choreographic creations ranging from poignant, to playful, to humorous. Choreographers include Angela Guthmiller, Christopher K. Morgan, Olivia Sabee, and Meredith Stapleton.
This project was made possible by funding from Project Stream, a grant initiative of the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts that is regionally admnistered by the Greater Philadelphia Cultural Alliance. Additional support for Project Stream is provided by PECO.
For Facebook: 

Olivia Sabee presents choreography in Wallingford (10/28 @ 7PM)

postcardagoraThe fall Friday Night Live concert series at Community Arts Center, 414 Plush Mill Road, Wallingford, PA, continues with an evening of Brazilian jazz and more with Minas and visual art by Nicole Tymowczak, Anthe Capitan-Valais and a special dance performance by Agora Dance on October 28th at 7:00 p.m. 
 
Agora Dance presents 3 Minutes Max, a selection of bite-sized choreographic creations ranging from poignant, to playful, to humorous. Choreographers include Angela Guthmiller, Christopher K. Morgan, Olivia Sabee, and Meredith Stapleton.
This project was made possible by funding from Project Stream, a grant initiative of the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts that is regionally admnistered by the Greater Philadelphia Cultural Alliance. Additional support for Project Stream is provided by PECO.
For Facebook: 

Performance in the Age of Bollywood, a lecture with Pallabi Chakravorty (11/29 @ 5:30PM, Temple University)

Tuesday, November 29, 2016 //
5:30 pm to 7:00 pm
screen-shot-2016-10-20-at-4-12-12-pm
CHAT Lounge 10th Floor // Gladfelter Hall // 1115 W. Berks Street // Philadelphia, PA 19122
Kristina M. Lang // 215-204-7609

Dance Studies Colloquium presents
A lecture with
Pallabi Chakravorty, Swarthmore College
“This is How We Dance Now: Performance in the Age of Bollywood”

CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING AND CINEMATIC ARTS
All Dance Studies Colloquium events are free and open to the public. No tickets are required.
This event will be livestreamed at http://livestream.com/accounts/1927261

Performance in the Age of Bollywood, a lecture with Pallabi Chakravorty (11/29 @ 5:30PM, Temple University)

Tuesday, November 29, 2016 //
5:30 pm to 7:00 pm
screen-shot-2016-10-20-at-4-12-12-pm
CHAT Lounge 10th Floor // Gladfelter Hall // 1115 W. Berks Street // Philadelphia, PA 19122
Kristina M. Lang // 215-204-7609

Dance Studies Colloquium presents
A lecture with
Pallabi Chakravorty, Swarthmore College
“This is How We Dance Now: Performance in the Age of Bollywood”

CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING AND CINEMATIC ARTS
All Dance Studies Colloquium events are free and open to the public. No tickets are required.
This event will be livestreamed at http://livestream.com/accounts/1927261

Production Ensemble 2016 presents Shakespeare’s AS YOU LIKE IT

A newly imagined production of AS YOU LIKE IT, Shakespeare’s pastoral comedy of cross-dressing, sheep, and love. This story of exile into the imagined Forest of Arden features the discovery of new identities, the poetry of roughing it, and the pleasures of falling head over heels. This production’s most special aspect – the entire play will be performed in Original Pronunciation, the dialect in which Shakespeare’s plays were originally heard.

Directed by Alex Torra with set by Matt Saunders, costumes by Laila Swanson, and lighting by James Murphy.

LPAC Pearson Hall Theater
November 11 @ 8PM
November 12 @ 2PM and 8PM
November 13 @ 2PM

Seating is limited. No reservations avaialable for general public seating.

FringeArts 2016 features some recent Swat Alums!

There’s still time to get tickets for the FringeArts events happening this week!

Don’t forget to add this latest creation from Patrick Ross ’14: http://www.neighborhood-house.com/calendar/scarlet-letters performed by Michaela Shuchman ’15 and music by Kimaya Diggs ’15. And here’s a recent review of the show – http://dcmetrotheaterarts.com/2016/09/17/2016-philadelphia-fringe-festival-review-scarlet-letters/

Plus keep an eye out for other escapades from other faculty and alums!!